GW Students Attend World Bank Meetings, Connect Research to Global Policy
IIEP sponsored GW students to attend the fall meetings of the World Bank and see their classroom lessons in impactful, real-world applications.
Browse past GW Today articles in our archives.
GW Students Attend World Bank Meetings, Connect Research to Global Policy
IIEP sponsored GW students to attend the fall meetings of the World Bank and see their classroom lessons in impactful, real-world applications.
Brewing History: Alumna Stirs Coffee’s Revolutionary Roots
In her new book, historian Michelle Craig McDonald, M.A. ’94, reveals coffee’s surprising place in America’s story of independence—and interdependence.
Selling Innovative Business Ideas at Pitch George
The annual competition sponsored by the GW Business Center for Entrepreneurial Excellence offers students real-life experiences.
GW Takes Major Step toward Comprehensive AI Strategy with University-Wide Mapping Exercise
Zoe Szajnfarber will lead a community exploration of AI implementation in research, education and operations and the associated opportunities and risks.
Genetic Testing Reveals Often-Overlooked Fungal Infections in California Clinics
Cryptic fungal pathogen is a dominant cause of drug-resistant infections in the area, a study by Milken Institute SPH’s Lance Price found.
GW’s Presidential Fellowship for Leadership Program Gives Graduate Students Multiple Benefits
This year’s fellows received a Luther Rice Foundation grant to strengthen community and facilitate interdisciplinary research.
Engineering Scholars Embody a Legacy of Service Leadership
Clark Scholars Program participants gathered to honor a transformational $11 million investment from the A. James & Alice B. Clark Foundation.
Fall 2025 Final Exam Period Resources
The Division for Student Affairs is offering resources and well-being support through finals.
Innovators Pitch Dual-Use Tech to Federal, Commercial Markets
OIE showcases the top performing teams in the Mid-Atlantic NSF I-Corps program and features talks by defense and federal government experts.
Atoms’ ‘Hidden Order’ Could Be a Game Changer for Semiconductors
Tianshu Li of GW Engineering co-led research finding that atoms in an alloy are not positioned randomly, but instead arrange themselves in “atomic neighborhoods.”